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Thoughts on emo, as a GENRE
Ihate
post Jun 20 2008, 02:06 AM
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YEAH!
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This is a topic that a lot of people disagree on. What classifies a song or a band as "emo" to you? Not necessarily talking about the way a band dresses, or the way they do their hair, etc...just strictly basing it off the sound of the band/song. Is it lyrical content? Is it an almost whiny style of singing and screaming? When I hear the word emo one generalization comes to mind, suicidal people, so to me I would say an emo band or song is based off the lyrical content more so than the sound they produce.

What do you think?
 
 
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Kontroll
post Jun 21 2008, 02:21 AM
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Jake - The Unholy Trinity / Premiscuous Poeteer.
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Ha ha. No if's and's or but's... Emo is just f**king gay.

I guess you really can't categorize the genre fully on the lyrics because of what they talk about. Alot of artists from the 70's talk about problems they have. Hell, even blues artists. That's all they do, so in essence, they are emo.

I guess it would be a collaboration of all of their elements.

But what really sticks out to me when I hear a song and can categorize it as emo is definitely that whiny bitch voice, like all emo singers have. f**king newbs.

It's just suburban kids tying to make a name for themselves. That's all. I've seen it replicated a million times.

Ghey.

QUOTE(NoSex @ Jun 20 2008, 08:29 PM) *
Emo (also known as emotive hardcore) is a form of hardcore punk which emerged in the mid-1980's around the scene in Washington D.C. with bands like Rites of Spring, Embrace, and Nation of Ulysses and continued on into the early 1990's with bands like Sunnday Day Real Estate and Fugazi. It wore American Hardcore influence on its sleeve with screaming and yelping vocalizations, simple percussion, and high distortion. However, due to the immense violence, discrimination, and rigidness in form within the hardcore punk scene... artists began to backlash. This created a more melodic, more experimental, and more personal sounds that was less chaotic and less violence.

Not until the turn of the century was the term largely perverted to include a "lifestyle," and "fashion." Further, the sound that the term "emo" was originally associated with has been entirely subjugated in today's generation. No longer is there a clear idea of what exactly "emo" sounds like, and, this sounds ambiguous nature has been accepted into the mainstream with bands like My Chemical Romance and and Dashboard Confessional being described as "emo."

LEARN SOMETHING.


Wow, buddy. Did you think of that all by yourself? thumbsup.gif Next time you should put quotes around your paragraphs that you steal from Wikipedia. Newb.

And I wouldn't say Dashboard is emo. Not quite the style.
 
NoSex
post Jun 21 2008, 02:36 AM
Post #3


in the reverb chamber.
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QUOTE(Kontroll @ Jun 21 2008, 02:21 AM) *
Wow, buddy. Did you think of that all by yourself? thumbsup.gif Next time you should put quotes around your paragraphs that you steal from Wikipedia. Newb.


I used wikipedia as a reference. But, most of that was all me, buddy.
In either case, read a book.


 

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